Table of Contents
How do I add friends on Sam learning?
Click on ‘My Profile’ tab and choose a character. Click on ‘My Profile’ tab. You can select 10 friends from your year group.
How to challenge someone on Sam learning?
Progress through a location is tracked via the progress bar found at the top of the screen. When a learner’s buddy finishes an activity, a challenge bubble may appear. This will show the score that a buddy received. By clicking Challenge, a learner can accept or ignore (X) the challenge.
What is Centre ID for Sam learning?
Click LOGIN found in the top right corner of the screen Enter your log in credential, which includes 3 pieces of information: Centre ID – the Centre ID is a unique identifier assigned to each school to be used by learners, teachers, and administrators.
Who created the SAM model?
Dr. Michael Allen
Developed by Dr. Michael Allen of Allen Interactions, this model uses a recursive rather than linear process for course development. The simplest SAM model is composed of three parts: Preparation, Iterative Design, and Iterative Development.
What does SA-Sams mean?
South African School Administration and Management System
The South African School Administration and Management System (SA-SAMS), is designed for the South African Education Sector and is maintained by the Department of Basic Education (DBE), ensuring that it is aligned to education policies.
Is Sam or ADDIE better?
The biggest difference is that SAM is an agile method – meaning that multiple steps are often taking place at once with room for a lot of collaboration with the customer while ADDIE is linear and often requires one step to be finished and reviewed before the project moves forward.
Is ADDIE a waterfall?
Waterfall is an adaptation of ADDIE that is sequential and linear. It follows these six steps: feasibility, analysis, design, implementation, testing, and maintenance. Once a step is completed the designer generally does not return to that step.
What are the 5 key stages of instructional design?
In this post we’ll explore the five stages of the ADDIE model of instructional design—analysis, design, development, implementation, and evaluation—and how this process can help or hurt your learning evaluation methods.